Ed Loyd: Fired up about change
Deirdre Newman
Ed Loyd is a passionate about his beliefs that the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District Board of Trustees needs to be invigorated and
made responsive to its constituents.
Loyd is running against Serene Stokes, who has been on the board
for eight years, and Ron Winship, who is running for two other
elected positions in November. The trustee zone covers Corona del
Mar.
A four-year Newport Beach resident with one child in the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District, Loyd is a blunt,
straight-talking candidate who says he is fed up with a school board
that he believes is past its prime and much too passive.
“A lot of [the trustees] should have been voted out a long time
ago,” Loyd said. “That board doesn’t initiate one blessed thing. They
just go to a lot of teas and award ceremonies.”
Loyd, who was born in Baltimore and raised in Brooklyn, was drawn
to politics at an early age, due to his grandfather’s political
leanings.
“My grandfather was a Republican, although the rest of the family
was Democrats,” Loyd said. “I used to sit down and talk to him as a
little kid and always had the urge to be active in politics.”
As a businessman, Loyd says he tackles problems head-on, solving
them by using his own resourcefulness and initiative. After going to
work for an electronics company on the East Coast in the late 1960s,
he encountered an area that was having problems receiving a cable
signal. So he started his own company to resolve the problem and was
so effective in obtaining franchises that the National Cable TV Assn.
enrolled him in its lobbying efforts. But Loyd encountered
difficulties procuring financial backing and was eventually squeezed
out of the company.
From there, he moved onto the international business arena,
working for a U.S. governmental organization in London that deals
with international development.
Loyd lasted 30 years in that position, working with foreign
countries, the World Bank and the United Nations.
Loyd moved his family to the Newport Beach area in 1998. His
involvement with the school district started a year later when he was
elected to the board of the Junior All-American Football league. The
previous president of the league had butted heads with a former
principal of Corona del Mar High School, resulting in the league
being banned from practicing at the school.
“I saw [the principal] handling the situation in a dictatorial
way,” Loyd said. So Loyd intervened. Asst. Supt. Jaime Castellanos
eventually sided with Loyd, and practices resumed, he said.
The incident left a sour taste in Loyd’s mouth about what he
perceived to be the principal’s blatant abuse of power. Loyd also
claims there is a pervasive climate of silence in the community that
prevents parents from expressing their true feelings about certain
teachers, coaches and administrators. He blames this on a lack of
confidence on the part of parents that they will prevail. He feels
they fear that retribution will be visited on their children.
Loyd has strong opinions, and he is not afraid to say what he
thinks needs to change on the school board, including enacting
two-term limits for trustees to continually bring in fresh ideas, and
redistricting to make the trustees more accountable to the residents
they represent.
If elected, Loyd says he will be receptive to concerns from
residents anywhere in the district.
“I want to give the electorate a voice on the board again,” Loyd
said. “So you can pick up the phone, even if you’re not in my
district. And I will have a full-time person to take your calls.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.